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    Home / Central Data Catalog / PER_2007_PHC_V01_M_V03_A_IPUMS / variable [F2]
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Nationala Censuses: 11th Population Census and 6th Housing Census 2007 - IPUMS Subset

Peru, 2007
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Reference ID
PER_2007_PHC_v01_M_v03_A_IPUMS
Producer(s)
National Institute of Statistics and Computing, Minnesota Population Center
Metadata
DDI/XML JSON
Study website
Created on
Sep 29, 2011
Last modified
Mar 29, 2019
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  • PER2007-H-H
  • PER2007-P-H

Main employment occupational category (PE2007A_0445)

Data file: PER2007-P-H

Overview

Valid: 0
Invalid: 0
Type: Discrete
Decimal: 0
Start: 222
End: 222
Width: 1
Range: -
Format:

Questions and instructions

Literal question
For persons aged six or older
[Applies to questions 13-19]



18. What type of employment did you have at your job last week? (Read each option and circle only one number)

[] 1 White-collar or professional employee
[] 2 Laborer
[] 3 Self-employed worker
[] 4 Employer
[] 5 Unpaid family worker
[] 6 Domestic employee
Categories
Value Category
1 White-collar or professional employee
2 Laborer
3 Self-employed worker
4 Employer
5 Unpaid family worker
6 Domestic employee
9 NIU (not in universe)
Warning: these figures indicate the number of cases found in the data file. They cannot be interpreted as summary statistics of the population of interest.
Interviewer instructions
For persons aged six and older
[Applies to questions 13-19]



Question 18: What type of employment did you have at your job last week?
Read the question and each of the options slowly, continuing until you receive a positive response from the respondent. Circle the corresponding option.
Reminder
Record agricultural laborers as laborers if they are paid in cash or kind for their work.
[p. 57]
[Each of the 6 examples below is accompanied by a drawing illustrating it.]

1. White-collar or professional employee. This is a person whose job is primarily intellectual. He/she works in an institution, organization, or private or state company in exchange for monthly or bi-weekly payment in the form of a salary or commission, or payment in kind. Examples would be a sales cashier in a store or a professional who works for an institution or a company.
2. Laborer [obrero]. This is a person whose job is primarily manual. He/she works in a company or private or state business for weekly, bi-weekly, or daily pay in the form of salary, or per unit produced, or on commission. Examples would be factory workers in a shoe factory or a bricklayer's assistant.
3. Self-employed worker. This is a person who runs his/her own business or works independently and has no paid employees. Examples would be a sign painter, or a fruit vendor in the street.
4. Employer. This is a person who runs his/her own company or business, or independently practices a profession or trade, and has one or more paid employees. Examples of this would be a certified public accountant that has two paid assistant accountants.
5. Unpaid family worker. This is a person who works without pay in a family company or business run by a relative, regardless of whether or not they live in the same household.
6. Domestic employee. This is a person who works in a private dwelling in exchange for pay. These services are related to specific tasks within the household, such as washer-woman, cook, housekeeper, butler, chauffer, etc.

Description

Definition
This variable indicates the class of worker.
Universe
Persons age 6+ who worked last week

concept

Concept
Name Vocabulary
Work Variables -- PERSON IPUMS
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